Thursday, June 28, 2012

Not a camp you'd want to visit

Sometimes I have a hard time judging what middle school readers would think of a book, and that was the case with 90 Miles to Havana by Enrique Flores-Galbis. Although the writing style won't be for everyone, the plot is pretty interesting.  Julian and his brothers are living a good life in Cuba in 1961.  But the country is in turmoil, and the boys are among 14,000 children evacuated to the U.S. as part of Operation Pedro Pan. The brothers live in a refugee camp in Miami, where surviving the actions of the camp bullies is a daily struggle.  The threat of being sent to an orphanage and never seeing their parents again is very real; when Julian's brothers are sent away, he's on his own.  Julian is a clever, resourceful kid - can he figure out how to reunite his family?  Based on the author's childhood experiences, this is a part of Cuban and U.S. history that isn't well known - but should be.

No comments:

Post a Comment